Your LinkedIn post sits in the feed for 2.3 seconds. That is the average time someone gives you before scrolling past. In that window, the difference between a wall of text and a visually scannable post is the difference between being ignored and being read.
Most people do not know that bold text in a LinkedIn post is not a native feature accessible from the editing toolbar. There is no “B” button. There is no rich text editor hiding in your compose window. But there absolutely is a method, and once you know it, you can make your posts stand out from the 90% of LinkedIn posts that are just plain paragraphs.
This is the exact technique that gets sales professionals, recruiters, marketers, and executives higher engagement rates, more visibility, and more authentic interactions on the platform. Let’s break down what most people miss and how to use it strategically.
Why Bold Text Matters for LinkedIn Engagement (And What Research Shows)
Bold text is more than just a formatting choice on LinkedIn it acts as a visual cue that instantly grabs attention in a crowded feed. Research on content readability and user behavior shows that posts with strategically highlighted words or phrases tend to improve scanning, readability, and engagement. Since most LinkedIn users quickly scroll through content, bold text helps emphasize key insights, important statistics, calls-to-action, and main takeaways without forcing readers to read every line. When used correctly, it can increase time spent on a post, encourage more interactions, and improve overall content performance. However, overusing bold formatting can make posts look spammy or difficult to read, so the key is to use it selectively to guide the reader’s focus naturally.
The Psychology of Bold Text in Feeds
When you scroll through LinkedIn, your brain is filtering. It is looking for signals about what is worth reading. A solid block of plain text signals “this requires effort.” Bold text signals “this is important, pay attention here.”
This is not psychological theory—it is how visual hierarchy works. Your eye naturally lands on contrasting elements. In a feed of plain-text posts, bold text creates contrast. Your reader’s eye finds it first, which means their brain processes it before anything else. If that first bold phrase is compelling, they keep reading. If it is not, they have already decided to scroll.
Research on web design and content consumption shows that readers do not read linearly online. They scan. They look for visual landmarks. They decide in milliseconds whether to engage. Bold text creates those landmarks. It says “start here,” “this matters,” “this is different.”
On LinkedIn specifically, where the average person sees 300+ posts in a week and engages with fewer than 5, standing out visually is not optional. It is the cost of entry.
Visual Hierarchy and Scroll-Stopping Power
LinkedIn’s algorithm does not directly rank posts based on text formatting. That is not how it works. But formatting changes behavior. When a post has visual structure, people stop scrolling longer. They read more. They are more likely to click, like, comment, or share.
That increased engagement signals to LinkedIn’s algorithm that your post is valuable. The algorithm then shows it to more people. So while the formatting itself is not ranked, the engagement it drives is ranked directly into the signal that determines your post’s reach.
Think about the difference between these two:
Without bold: “I started my business with no experience. I made a lot of mistakes. I learned from them. Now I help others avoid the same pitfalls. Here is what I wish I had known.”
With strategic bold: “I started my business with no experience. I made a lot of mistakes. I learned from them. Now I help others avoid the same pitfalls. Here is what I wish I had known.”
In the second version, your eye lands on the key terms. You process the narrative faster. You are more likely to keep reading to see where this goes.
Bold Text and Engagement Rates
There is no universally cited “bold text increases engagement by X%” statistic because LinkedIn does not publish fine-grained formatting analytics. But every content strategist and outbound operator who runs volume on LinkedIn will tell you the same thing: posts with visual formatting get higher engagement rates than those without.
The reason is simple: more people read them. If your post gets 2x the read-through rate because of formatting, it gets more engagement. More engagement means better algorithmic distribution. Better distribution means more reach.
Posts from top LinkedIn creators, recruiters with massive followings, and sales teams running outbound campaigns almost always use bold text strategically. They do this because it works.
How to Bold Text in a LinkedIn Post: The Native Formatting Method
LinkedIn now offers native text formatting options that allow users to make their posts more engaging and easier to read without relying on third-party tools. By using the built-in formatting feature, you can bold important words, create bullet points, add italics, and structure your content in a cleaner way directly while writing a post or article. This helps highlight key messages, improve readability, and guide readers toward the most valuable parts of your content. Whether you are sharing professional insights, promoting a brand, or posting thought leadership content, understanding how to use LinkedIn’s native formatting effectively can make your posts look more polished and increase audience engagement.
The Asterisk Trick Explained Step-by-Step
Here is the method that most people do not know: LinkedIn accepts asterisk markdown. You do not need any special app, any workaround tool, or any external formatting platform. You just need to wrap your text in asterisks, and LinkedIn’s system converts it to bold when you post.
Here is exactly how to do it:
Step 1: Open LinkedIn and start composing your post. This works on web, mobile, and the LinkedIn mobile app. You are just typing in the standard compose box.
Step 2: Type an asterisk, then your text, then another asterisk. Like this: bold text here
Step 3: Post normally. When you hit “Post,” LinkedIn processes that markdown and converts it to actual bold formatting. When your followers see the post, they see bold text. Not asterisks. Actual bold.
Let me give you a real example. If you type this in the compose box:
“I just landed my first client using LinkedIn outreach. The result: 14 qualified meetings in 30 days. Here is how I did it.”
When that post publishes, it appears as:
“I just landed my first client using LinkedIn outreach. The result: 14 qualified meetings in 30 days. Here is how I did it.”
The asterisks disappear. The text is bold. Your readers see professional formatting, not raw markdown.
Why does this work? LinkedIn’s compose system runs user input through a markdown parser before publishing. Most platforms have this backend system but do not expose markdown to users. LinkedIn does not advertise this feature, which is why almost no one knows about it. But it works consistently across the platform.
The key thing to understand: this is not a hack or a workaround. It is a legitimate feature of LinkedIn’s publishing system. It is just undocumented. Thousands of users do this every day, and LinkedIn does not disable it because it is working as intended.
Mobile vs Desktop Rendering (The Gotcha)
Here is where most people mess up: they assume that if bold text looks right in the compose preview, it will look right when posted. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it does not.
The problem is that LinkedIn’s compose box preview is not always accurate. You might type your post, see the asterisks in the compose box, and assume they will disappear when posted. Usually they do. But occasionally, depending on what version of the LinkedIn app you are using, what device you are on, or what network connection you have, the markdown does not parse correctly on first load.
This means sometimes your followers will see text with asterisks instead of bold text. It usually corrects within a few minutes as the page refreshes and the markdown reprocesses, but in those critical first few minutes when engagement is highest, your post looks unfinished.
The workaround is simple: always post and then verify. After you post, refresh the page or pull down to refresh your feed. Check how your post actually renders. If the asterisks are still showing, you can delete the post and try again. If the bold came through correctly, you are done.
On mobile, the rendering is sometimes slower. The compose box itself looks fine. You hit post. But the published version might take 30 seconds to 2 minutes to render the markdown as bold. This is a network and app version thing, not a settings thing. It always resolves, but you need to know to check.
On desktop, the rendering is almost instantaneous. You post, and the bold appears immediately in most cases. Desktop is generally more reliable for this reason.
The lesson: do not set your bold text and forget about it. Especially if you are posting something time-sensitive that requires immediate engagement, take 30 seconds to verify the formatting actually published correctly. It takes one extra click, and it saves you from looking like you do not know how to format a post.
Testing Your Bold Formatting Before Posting
If you want to be absolutely certain your formatting works before going live, there is one method: do a practice post on your own profile, check how it renders, delete it, and then post your real version.
I know that sounds like extra work, but it is not. It takes 60 seconds. You open LinkedIn, compose your post with bold text included, post it, wait 30 seconds for the markdown to render, check it, delete it, and then recompose your final version. By the time you post the final version, you know exactly how it will look.
This is especially smart if you are posting something important: a big career announcement, a client testimonial, a major piece of thought leadership that you expect to get significant engagement. The confidence that your formatting is perfect matters.
Another approach: test the formatting on a less visible post first. Post to a draft, post to a LinkedIn comment (which uses the same formatting system), or test it on a company page you run that gets less visibility than your main profile. This gives you the same information without putting your high-visibility post at risk.
The reality is that 99% of the time, the asterisk method works flawlessly. The 1% of the time it does not is when you are in edge cases (very old app versions, unusual network conditions, etc.). Testing takes the risk to zero.
Beyond Basic Bold: Advanced Formatting Techniques Most People Miss
Most LinkedIn users only scratch the surface of post formatting by using occasional bold text, but advanced formatting techniques can make content significantly more engaging and professional. Strategic use of spacing, line breaks, bullet points, emojis, capitalization, short paragraphs, and text hierarchy can dramatically improve readability and keep users scrolling through your post longer. Many high-performing creators also combine bold text with storytelling structures, attention-grabbing hooks, and clear calls-to-action to increase comments and shares. Understanding these overlooked formatting methods helps your content stand out in a competitive feed while making complex information easier for readers to absorb quickly.
Combining Bold with Other Formatting Options
Bold text by itself is powerful. Bold text combined with other formatting is strategic. LinkedIn’s markdown parser accepts multiple formatting syntax rules, and most people just do not know about them.
You can combine bold with line breaks. You can use bold multiple times in one post, with different emphasis. You can create visual hierarchy by mixing which elements are bold.
For example, here is a post using bold strategically across multiple sentences:
“My biggest mistake in my first business: I did not track metrics. I just worked. I assumed effort equals results. It does not. Everything changed when I started measuring. I measured acquisition cost. I measured lifetime value. I measured conversion rates. Suddenly, I knew exactly what to optimize. This simple shift turned a failing business into a six-figure business.”
Notice how the bold phrases hit the key emotional points and the key turning points. The reader’s eye is drawn to those moments. It creates rhythm. It builds a narrative arc.
You can also use bold in lists. Instead of bullet points (which LinkedIn also supports, incidentally), you can bold key terms in a paragraph and create a scannable structure:
“Here are the three things you should measure: Inbound activity tracks how many prospects are reaching out to you. Conversion rate shows what percentage of conversations turn into meetings. Deal velocity measures how long it takes from first conversation to closed deal.”
Notice the bold terms act like sub-headlines. The reader can scan just the bold words and understand the structure, then dive into the explanatory text around each one.
The Line Break Strategy for Visual Impact
Bold text is powerful on its own, but bold text with intentional line breaks is where the magic happens. Most people write posts as solid paragraphs. When you add line breaks and bold, the post becomes visually dynamic.
Here is an example of a typical post:
“I worked as a software engineer for 5 years before I decided to start my own consulting business. The first 6 months were rough. I had no clients. I had no reputation. I had no idea how to sell my services. But I kept pushing. I applied what I learned about product development to selling myself. Within a year, I was fully booked.”
Now here is the same post with strategic line breaks and bold:
“I worked as a software engineer for 5 years before I decided to start my own consulting business.
The first 6 months were rough. I had no clients. I had no reputation. I had no idea how to sell my services.
But I kept pushing. I applied what I learned about product development to selling myself.
Within a year, I was fully booked.”
The line breaks give the reader’s eye a chance to rest. The bold line is the turning point. When the reader scans this version, they immediately understand the narrative structure. They see struggle, turning point, success. The visual layout mirrors the emotional arc.
LinkedIn’s compose system accepts line breaks exactly as you type them. Just hit enter twice (one enter creates a single line break, two enters create a paragraph break). The spacing renders properly in the published post.
This combination of line breaks and bold is what separates posts that feel like walls of text from posts that feel like carefully crafted messages. And it still takes just a few extra seconds to format.
When NOT to Use Bold (The Frequency Trap)
The most common mistake with bold text is using it too much. If 30% of your post is bold, then bold is not bold anymore. It is just normal formatting. It loses its emphasis.
Think about it like a LOUD VOICE. If you always shout, no one knows when you are emphasizing something. The volume becomes baseline. Bold text works the same way.
The rule of thumb: bold should appear in 5% to 15% of your post. Not more. If you bold more than that, you are not emphasizing anymore, you are just using a different font weight for most of your text. The whole point is that bold is rare enough to stand out.
This means you should bold your most important ideas, your key turning points, your strongest statistics, your call-to-action. Not every important word. Not every sentence. Just the moments that truly matter.
Another mistake people make: bolding entire sentences or entire paragraphs. Bold works best for short phrases, 3 to 8 words. An entire sentence in bold is usually too much. Your eye does not land on a specific moment. It just sees a big block of bold text.
Compare these:
Too much bold: “I want you to know that bold text is one of the most powerful formatting tools available on LinkedIn, and you should use it strategically to improve your engagement and reach.“
Just right: “I want you to know that bold text is one of the most powerful formatting tools available on LinkedIn. Use it strategically.“
In the first version, the bold is so thick that it does not actually emphasize anything. In the second, the bold phrase hits hard because it is sparse.
The Strategic Placement of Bold Text for Maximum LinkedIn Impact
Using bold text effectively on LinkedIn is not just about making words stand out, it is about placing emphasis where it influences reader behavior the most. Strategic placement of bold text can help capture attention in the opening hook, highlight key insights in the middle of the post, and draw focus to calls-to-action at the end. Since LinkedIn users typically skim content before deciding whether to engage, well-positioned bold formatting improves readability and guides the audience through the post naturally. When combined with strong storytelling, clean formatting, and concise messaging, bold text can increase dwell time, boost engagement, and make your content more memorable without overwhelming the reader.
Bold Your Hook (The First 2-3 Lines)
LinkedIn users give you about 2.3 seconds before they scroll. That is not an exaggeration. That is the observed average for a social media post before someone makes a decision to keep reading or move on.
In those 2.3 seconds, your opening hook matters more than anything else in the post. It is where you are either stopping the scroll or losing the reader.
This is where bold text becomes a tool for survival. If your very first bold phrase is interesting, relevant, or surprising, the reader’s eye lands on it immediately. Their brain processes it. If it is compelling, they make the decision to read more.
Example of a post where the bold in the first line works:
“I got fired from my job as a sales director. But it was the best thing that ever happened to my career. Here is why.”
The reader scrolling sees that first bold phrase immediately. “I got fired.” That is surprising. It is the kind of opening that stops a scroll. Now they want to read more.
Compare that to:
“I worked in sales for many years and recently had a significant life change that has been beneficial to my career growth. I want to share the reasons why this transition was positive.”
Same ultimate point. Completely different impact. The first version makes your reader stop. The second version makes them scroll.
The strategic placement for your hook bold is the first 1-3 lines of your post. Make it surprising, relatable, or novel. Make it something the reader did not expect. That is when bold hits hardest.
Bold Key Statistics and Social Proof
The second most important place to bold is where you cite numbers, results, or social proof. These are moments of credibility. They are where you show that what you are saying is real, measurable, and proven.
When a reader sees a bold statistic, they psychologically read it with more weight. It becomes evidence. It becomes proof that your statement is true.
For example:
“I started my LinkedIn outreach campaign with no network and no experience. In the first 30 days, I sent 500 connection requests. I got a 38% connection acceptance rate. That might not sound high until you realize it means 190 new connections from cold outreach. From those 190 connections, 14 people scheduled calls with me. That is a 7.4% reply rate and a 2.8% meeting booking rate. For someone with zero network, that changed everything.”
Notice how the bold statistics hit different than the narrative around them. They feel official. They feel verified. The reader trusts them more because they are visually emphasized.
This works for social proof too:
“I worked with this approach for 6 months and had one major result: my team booked 47 qualified meetings. Now three of our clients have signed annual contracts based on those meetings. The revenue impact is over 240,000 dollars in pipeline. That is what happens when you focus on quality over quantity.”
The bold numbers are the proof. The narrative is the explanation. Together, they are credible.
Bold Your Call-to-Action
The third most strategic place to bold text is your call-to-action. The CTA is the moment where you are asking for something: click here, reply to me, schedule a call, read this article, apply for this position.
Most LinkedIn posts are not asking for anything. Most are just sharing a story or an idea. But if your post has a point beyond just sharing, that point should be bolded.
Examples:
“This is exactly what I teach in my masterclass on LinkedIn outreach. If you want to apply, reply to this post.“
“I am hiring for a Sales Development Representative role. This is a great opportunity if you are starting your sales career. DM me to learn more.“
“I have written a complete guide on this topic. The link is in my profile.“
The bold CTA stands out. It tells the reader exactly what to do next. And because it is bolded, they are more likely to actually do it.
The strategic order here matters: hook, then evidence, then CTA. Bold supports all three, but each at a different level of importance.
Mistakes People Make When Bolding Text on LinkedIn
While bold text can improve the visibility and readability of LinkedIn posts, many users make the mistake of overusing it or applying it without a clear strategy. Bolding entire paragraphs, highlighting too many words, or mixing excessive formatting styles can make content look cluttered, unprofessional, and difficult to read. Some creators also rely heavily on Unicode bold generators, which may not display properly across all devices or can hurt accessibility. Another common mistake is using bold text without improving the actual value of the content, assuming formatting alone will drive engagement. To make LinkedIn posts effective, bold text should be used selectively to emphasize key points, guide attention naturally, and support high-quality content rather than distract from it.
Over-Bolding (Killing the Visual Impact)
The biggest mistake is thinking that more bold is always better. It is not. More bold is just more bold. It is not more effective.
I see posts where 40%, 50%, or even 60% of the content is bolded. At that point, you are not using bold to emphasize. You are just using a different font weight. The visual contrast that makes bold powerful completely disappears.
Think about what happens neurologically when your reader scans a post with extreme over-bolding: their eye has no clear path. Everything is competing for attention. Nothing stands out. So actually, their brain processes the post as less organized, not more.
Here is what I mean:
“I learned something this week that completely changed my approach to LinkedIn outreach. For years, I thought that volume was the only strategy that worked. I was sending hundreds of connection requests every week. But my reply rate was consistently low. I was frustrated and considering quitting the entire process.”
That is exhausting to read. The bolding is not helping. It is hurting. Every bolded phrase is screaming for attention. When everything screams, nothing is heard.
Here is the same passage with strategic bolding:
“I learned something this week that completely changed my approach to LinkedIn outreach. For years, I thought that volume was the only strategy that worked. I was sending hundreds of connection requests every week. But my reply rate was consistently low. I was frustrated and considering quitting the entire process.”
The bold phrase creates a moment. It says “this is the turning point, pay attention.” And because it is rare, the reader actually does pay attention.
The fix is simple: count your bolded phrases. If you have more than 5-7 in a 300-word post, you are bolding too much. Delete some. Keep only the moments that truly matter.
Formatting Inconsistency Across Devices
Another common issue: you compose a post on desktop, it looks perfect, then you check it on mobile and the formatting looks wrong. Or vice versa.
This is usually a caching issue or an app version issue. Your old version of the LinkedIn app on your phone is showing a cached version of the post before the markdown fully processed. But to other people viewing your post from mobile, it probably looks fine.
The fix: if you notice inconsistency, do not panic. Wait 10 minutes and refresh. The post will likely render correctly. If it still looks wrong after 10 minutes, then there is a real issue.
But here is the thing: it is extremely rare for the asterisk markdown to fail completely on LinkedIn. The system is stable. If your formatting looks wrong, it is usually a temporary caching issue, not a permanent problem.
Bolding the Wrong Content Elements
Some people bold their hashtags. Some people bold their headline or title. Some people bold the wrong parts of their narrative arc.
Hashtags should not be bolded. They serve a specific function: they are tags that help LinkedIn’s algorithm and allow users to search by topic. Bolding them just makes them harder to read and provides no functional value.
Your headline or opening statement might be bold if the entire phrase is important. But usually, you want to bold only the most surprising or important part of your opening, not the whole thing.
And for narrative arc, you want to bold turning points, conclusions, and evidence. Not setup, not explanation, not filler. The moments that matter.
This is where it comes back to strategy. Before you place that asterisk, ask yourself: “Is this the moment my reader needs to remember? Is this the thing I want them to focus on?” If the answer is yes, bold it. If not, leave it plain.
LinkedIn Post Formatting Beyond Bold: A Complete Toolkit
Italics, Line Breaks, and Hashtag Placement
Bold is just one part of the formatting toolkit on LinkedIn. Most people do not know that italics work too. You can create italic text by using underscores: text here
When you post text with underscores, it renders as italic text: text. Just like bold with asterisks, this is markdown that LinkedIn’s parser processes.
Italics are useful for emphasis that is lighter than bold. Where bold says “pay attention,” italics say “notice this.” They are good for asides, for quotes, for slightly less important emphasis.
You can also combine them. This text is both bold and italic. Use this rarely, for maximum emphasis on something truly critical.
Line breaks work as I mentioned earlier. One enter creates a line break. Two enters create a paragraph break. Use line breaks to create visual white space. Use them to separate ideas. Use them to give your reader’s eye a place to rest between thoughts.
Hashtags are a separate thing entirely. You can place them at the end of your post, throughout your post, or not use them at all. LinkedIn’s algorithm actually does not weight hashtags as heavily as it did 5 years ago. Using them is fine, but they are not a magic engagement lever. The conventional wisdom is to use 3-5 hashtags, but honestly, a well-written post with no hashtags will outperform a poorly written post with 10 hashtags every single time.
What matters is the content itself and how people engage with it. Hashtags are a minor signal at best.
Mixing Formats Strategically
You can combine bold, italics, and line breaks into a single post. The key is that it all serves a single purpose: making your content more scannable and more visually interesting.
Here is an example of a post using multiple formatting elements:
“I fired my worst client last week. It felt wrong at the time.
But it was the smartest business decision I made all year.
Here is why:
Bad fit clients drain your energy. They question every invoice. They demand scope creep. They threaten to leave but never actually do. One bad client takes the energy of three good clients.
So I did the math. I calculated what this one client was costing me in time, stress, and opportunity cost. The number shocked me. If I removed this client and filled that time with just one new client at my standard rate, I would make more money and work less.
The lesson: some growth means firing customers. Sometimes scaling means saying no to revenue that does not serve your goals.
Has this ever happened to you?“
In this example, notice:
- Line breaks create rhythm and visual hierarchy
- Bold elements (Here is why, The number shocked me, I would make more money and work less) emphasize the key moments
- Italics (Bad fit clients, Has this ever happened to you?) add secondary emphasis for asides and questions
- The entire structure is scannable, even if you just read the bold parts
This is sophisticated formatting, but it takes only minutes to compose. And the result is a post that is simultaneously more readable and more likely to get engagement.
How LinkedIn’s Algorithm Actually Reads Formatted Text
One more thing people wonder about: does LinkedIn’s algorithm actually understand formatted text, or does it just see plain text underneath the formatting?
The answer is nuanced. LinkedIn’s algorithm does not directly rank posts based on formatting. There is no signal that says “bold text increases reach.” The algorithm looks at engagement metrics: do people stop scrolling? Do they read more of the post? Do they like, comment, or share?
Formatting that increases those behaviors indirectly increases algorithmic reach. So while formatting itself is not ranked, the engagement it drives is.
Internally, LinkedIn’s system sees your post as text with metadata about formatting. When the algorithm evaluates your post, it is processing the plain text beneath the formatting (keywords, entities, topics), not the visual presentation. But the visual presentation changes how humans interact with the post, which changes the engagement signals, which changes what the algorithm does with it.
This is why the best strategy is not to format for the algorithm. It is to format for humans. Format in a way that makes your post more readable, more skimmable, and more likely to keep people engaged. Do that, and the algorithm follows because engagement is what the algorithm measures.
Conclusion
The asterisk method for bolding text on LinkedIn is not a hack. It is not a workaround. It is a legitimate formatting feature that LinkedIn’s system supports, just does not advertise. It is there for anyone who knows about it, and now you do.
But knowing how to bold text is only half the battle. The strategic part is knowing when to bold text, where to place it, how much to use, and how it fits into a larger formatting strategy.
The posts that get the most engagement are not just better written. They are better designed. They are visually structured in a way that respects your reader’s time and attention. Bold text, combined with line breaks and strategic emphasis, creates that structure.
Start with your next post. Identify the 3-5 most important moments in your message. Wrap those in asterisks. Post it. Check how it renders. Notice the difference in how the post reads. Then start paying attention to engagement. Most people who implement this simple change see an immediate increase in read-through rates, which compounds into more comments, more shares, and more reach.
The real trick that most people do not know is not the method itself. It is that most people are not using formatting strategically at all. By simply adding bold text to your posts, you are already ahead of 90% of LinkedIn users.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Does bolding text actually increase LinkedIn engagement?
A: Not directly. LinkedIn’s algorithm does not rank posts based on formatting. But bolding text makes posts more readable and more scannable, which increases the percentage of people who read the entire post and take action. That increased engagement is then ranked by the algorithm, so yes, strategic bolding leads to higher reach indirectly.
Q: Can I bold text on LinkedIn mobile app?
A: Yes. The asterisk method works identically on the mobile app as on desktop. Type your text in the compose box, wrap it in asterisks (text), and post. The markdown will parse the same way on mobile.
Q: What if my asterisks are not converting to bold when I post?
A: This is rare, but if it happens, wait 10 minutes for the page to refresh and the markdown to reprocess. If it still shows asterisks after 10 minutes, delete the post and try again. It is usually a caching or network issue that resolves on repost.
Q: Should I bold multiple sentences in a row or keep bold text to short phrases?
A: Keep bold to short phrases, 3 to 8 words ideally. If you bold an entire sentence or multiple sentences in a row, the visual emphasis is lost. The power of bold comes from contrast and rarity. Use it sparingly.
Q: Do hashtags work better if I bold them?
A: No. Bolding hashtags does not improve their function and makes them harder to read. Hashtags serve a specific purpose (discoverability), and formatting them does not change that. Leave hashtags unformatted.
Q: Can I use bold text in LinkedIn comments?
A: Yes. The asterisk method works in comments exactly as it works in posts. You can bold text in replies, threaded comments, and article comments.
Q: What is the difference between bold and italics on LinkedIn, and when should I use each?
A: Bold (text) says “pay attention to this moment.” Italics (text) says “notice this, but it is secondary.” Use bold for key moments, statistics, and turning points. Use italics for asides, quotes, questions, or slightly less important emphasis.
Q: Does LinkedIn penalize posts with too much formatting?
A: No. There is no penalty for using bold or other formatting. The risk is that over-formatting makes your post harder to read, which reduces engagement naturally. The penalty comes from readability, not from the system.
Q: Is the asterisk method being phased out by LinkedIn?
A: No. LinkedIn has been supporting markdown for years and continues to support it. This is a stable, permanent feature of the platform, just not well-known.
Q: How many times should I use bold text in a single LinkedIn post?
A: Aim for 5 to 10 bolded phrases in a 300-word post. That is roughly 1.5% to 3% bolded text. More than that, and the emphasis is lost. Less than that, and you might be missing opportunities to highlight important moments.
Q: Does bold text affect LinkedIn’s character limit?
A: No. The asterisks you type do count toward the character limit, but once the post is published, they disappear and are replaced with formatting metadata. Your published post is not longer because you used bold.
Q: Can I bold hashtags inside a phrase, like #LinkedInTips, or should they always be plain?
A: You can technically bold hashtags, but there is no benefit to doing so. Leave hashtags plain. They work better that way.